| owner-nettime-l on Mon, 1 Sep 1997 22:40:15 +0200 (MET DST) |
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| <nettime> Re: 'emailing elizabeth grosz' An Interview with Maria Kunda |
I cannot lay claim to any particular competence in continental
philosophy. However, Professor Grosz is one of my valued colleagues
-- her appointment is partly in philosophy and partly in Comp Lit
and Critical Theory -- and I think that it is utterly inappropriate
that substantive issues about the originality of her work be
addressed in this forum in such a flippant and casual way. If the
claim is that the key themes in her work are genuinely derivative,
then let us see some texts cited from Grosz and from Kristeva, etc
and compared. Does Grosz purport to be doing more than trying to
elucidate ideas found in these authors? These are genuine issues
about scholarship and there are institutional norms for settling such
matters. These do not include 'interviews' on a-phil that are utterly
devoid of references.
But it is clear that this is not even the real issue. The complaint
is really about style. Grosz' work is disliked:
> Because they are didactic. They simplify and label. Grosz's _Sexual
> Subversions_ is a good introduction to a field of dense literature, and its
> her book that I am by far the most familiar with, and which has helped me
> greatly, but it is representative. It deals with the 'content' of
> intellectual works which rely very heavily on form for their
> import. ...
> the
> different kind of writing, and the different voices that these women use,
> which is very evident even in translation - all that is obscured, and
> somehow sanitised.
> Grosz is one layer writing, a report on sources, its honest but I find it
> bereft, not really writing.
It would appear that Professor Grosz' real fault is trying to write
work that makes an honest attempt to say what is meant. If one layer
writing is *clear* writing that attempts to set out the arguments and
assess their soundness, please give me more of it. As I said at the
outset, my engagement with continental philosophy has been fairly
minimal so far and one thing that puts me off is that I frequently
feel that authors writing in this tradition are being deliberately
obscure. This is not to say that there is no place for form in
philosophical writing -- witness Plato's dialogues. But Plato's
intentions are frequently pretty clear: he wants you to think
some things through on your own with a bit of guidance from Socrates.
Instead Grosz is castigated for not writing. And what is writing?
> When you commit yourself to paper, virtual or otherwise.
Surely sincerity is not in itself a sufficient condition for
scholarly writing. I also have to intend that my audience form
certain beliefs about what I think as a result of recognising my
intention that they form those beliefs. If I want them to come to
share those beliefs, then surely I must provide them with the means
of sharing the evidence that I myself have for those beliefs. If
Grosz' books have a kind of popularity with people who don't read
much writing in the continental tradition, perhaps it is because she
discharges these obligations better than other writers do.
===============================================================
Dirk Baltzly Tel. 03-9905-3209
Philosophy Dept Fax 03-9905-3206
Monash Uni dirk.baltzly@arts.monash.edu.au
Melbourne, Victoria 3168
Australia
And all creatures, both animals and birds, were tame and
gentle towards men, and friendliness glowed between them.
Empedocles, DK B130 (tr. Freeman)
[well i would say that's an extremely local debate, or what is it? /p]
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